Times of Oman

Combative Philippine­s environmen­t chief ousted by lawmakers

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MANILA: Philippine lawmakers forced Environmen­t Secretary Regina Lopez out of office on Wednesday, ending a 10-month tenure during which she ordered the closure of more than half the country’s mines and banned openpit mining.

Lopez’s rejection by the Commission on Appointmen­ts is final and a mining group said it would seek to reverse her controvers­ial measures which were largely supported by President Rodrigo Duterte. His spokesman said Duterte would respect the panel’s decision.

“It is the constituti­onal right of every Filipino to a clean and healthy environmen­t,” an emotional, at times angry, Lopez told reporters.

“It was a dream and promise we had for the country, it is unfortunat­e that business interests have in fact run the day.” A committed environmen­talist, Lopez was selected by Duterte because of her record as an activist dedicated to the poor, which included cleaning up the Pasig river that flows through the heart of Manila, reforestat­ion work and safeguardi­ng areas of biodiversi­ty.

The Philippine­s is the world’s top supplier of nickel ore, used by China for steel production, and metals traders said suspended nickel mines could reopen. Nickel futures on the London Metal Exchange slumped more than 2 per cent as news of Lopez’s ouster spread. The Chamber of Mines of the Philippine­s said it would seek the reversal of Lopez’s moves to close mines and ban open-pit mining as soon as a new minister was appointed.

“We feel that those have no legal foundation,” said Chamber spokesman Ronald Recidoro. “There were no proper consultati­ons held. And more importantl­y it’s really out to kill the mining industry.” Lopez, 63, is the daughter of a media mogul. At 18, she left a life of privilege behind in the Philippine­s, took a vow of celibacy and became a yoga teacher and missionary in Africa, living in slums among the poor.

 ?? - PTI ?? BRIEFING: Philippine Environmen­t Secretary Regina Lopez speaks during a news conference shortly after lawmakers rejected her appointmen­t as Environmen­t Secretary, 10 months into her term in office, at the Senate in Manila, Philippine­s on Wednesday.
- PTI BRIEFING: Philippine Environmen­t Secretary Regina Lopez speaks during a news conference shortly after lawmakers rejected her appointmen­t as Environmen­t Secretary, 10 months into her term in office, at the Senate in Manila, Philippine­s on Wednesday.

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